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"
I
’
ll
come
,
I
’
ll
come
.
I
shall
let
him
off
easily
,
you
know
,
"
said
Mr
.
Brooke
aside
to
Dorothea
,
shuffling
away
very
cheerfully
.
"
I
hope
you
feel
how
right
this
change
is
that
I
—
that
Sir
James
wishes
for
,
"
said
Dorothea
to
Will
,
as
soon
as
her
uncle
was
gone
.
"
I
do
,
now
I
have
heard
you
speak
about
it
.
I
shall
not
forget
what
you
have
said
.
But
can
you
think
of
something
else
at
this
moment
?
I
may
not
have
another
opportunity
of
speaking
to
you
about
what
has
occurred
,
"
said
Will
,
rising
with
a
movement
of
impatience
,
and
holding
the
back
of
his
chair
with
both
hands
.
"
Pray
tell
me
what
it
is
,
"
said
Dorothea
,
anxiously
,
also
rising
and
going
to
the
open
window
,
where
Monk
was
looking
in
,
panting
and
wagging
his
tail
.
She
leaned
her
back
against
the
window
-
frame
,
and
laid
her
hand
on
the
dog
’
s
head
;
for
though
,
as
we
know
,
she
was
not
fond
of
pets
that
must
be
held
in
the
hands
or
trodden
on
,
she
was
always
attentive
to
the
feelings
of
dogs
,
and
very
polite
if
she
had
to
decline
their
advances
.
Will
followed
her
only
with
his
eyes
and
said
,
"
I
presume
you
know
that
Mr
.
Casaubon
has
forbidden
me
to
go
to
his
house
.
"
"
No
,
I
did
not
,
"
said
Dorothea
,
after
a
moment
’
s
pause
.
She
was
evidently
much
moved
.
"
I
am
very
,
very
sorry
,
"
she
added
,
mournfully
.
She
was
thinking
of
what
Will
had
no
knowledge
of
—
the
conversation
between
her
and
her
husband
in
the
darkness
;
and
she
was
anew
smitten
with
hopelessness
that
she
could
influence
Mr
.
Casaubon
’
s
action
.
But
the
marked
expression
of
her
sorrow
convinced
Will
that
it
was
not
all
given
to
him
personally
,
and
that
Dorothea
had
not
been
visited
by
the
idea
that
Mr
.
Casaubon
’
s
dislike
and
jealousy
of
him
turned
upon
herself
.
He
felt
an
odd
mixture
of
delight
and
vexation
:
of
delight
that
he
could
dwell
and
be
cherished
in
her
thought
as
in
a
pure
home
,
without
suspicion
and
without
stint
—
of
vexation
because
he
was
of
too
little
account
with
her
,
was
not
formidable
enough
,
was
treated
with
an
unhesitating
benevolence
which
did
not
flatter
him
.
But
his
dread
of
any
change
in
Dorothea
was
stronger
than
his
discontent
,
and
he
began
to
speak
again
in
a
tone
of
mere
explanation
.
"
Mr
.
Casaubon
’
s
reason
is
,
his
displeasure
at
my
taking
a
position
here
which
he
considers
unsuited
to
my
rank
as
his
cousin
.
I
have
told
him
that
I
cannot
give
way
on
this
point
.
It
is
a
little
too
hard
on
me
to
expect
that
my
course
in
life
is
to
be
hampered
by
prejudices
which
I
think
ridiculous
.
Obligation
may
be
stretched
till
it
is
no
better
than
a
brand
of
slavery
stamped
on
us
when
we
were
too
young
to
know
its
meaning
.
I
would
not
have
accepted
the
position
if
I
had
not
meant
to
make
it
useful
and
honorable
.
I
am
not
bound
to
regard
family
dignity
in
any
other
light
.
"
Dorothea
felt
wretched
.
She
thought
her
husband
altogether
in
the
wrong
,
on
more
grounds
than
Will
had
mentioned
.